Gelada

The last of the grass-grazing primates, Ethiopia's gelada monkeys live in matriarchal societies.

Photograph by Michael Nichols

Map

Gelada Range

Fast Facts

Type:

Mammal

Diet:

Omnivore

Average life span in the wild:

19 years

Size:

19.7 to 29.1 in (50 to 74 cm)

Weight:

28.6 to 46.2 lbs (13 to 21 kg)

Group name:

Tribe or troop

Protection status:

Threatened

Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:

Gelada monkeys live only in the high mountain meadows of Ethiopia—an environment very unlike those of their forest- or savanna-dwelling primate relatives. This high-altitude homeland is replete with steep, rocky cliffs, to which geladas have adapted. At night, the animals drop over precipice edges to sleep huddled together on ledges.

These baboon-size animals are the world's most terrestrial primates—except for humans. As grass-eaters, they are the last surviving species of ancient grazing primates that were once numerous. Geladas spend most of their day sitting down, plucking and munching on grasses. They have fatty rear ends, much like human buttocks, which seem well adapted to this activity.

Theropithecus gelada live in small family units of one male and three to six females. Though males are larger and more colorful, females dominate gelada societies. When an aging male begins to decline, the females in his family decide when he will be replaced by a younger rival—though the male will do all he can do to drive off such competition.

Gelada family units often combine to form large foraging bands of 30 to 350 animals. When food is abundant as many as 670 geladas have been seen together.

About 100,000 to 200,000 gelada monkeys survive, but even their remote mountain locales are feeling the effects of encroaching agriculture that threatens the grasslands. Indigenous peoples also hunt gelada and use their impressive manes in traditional coming-of-age ceremonies.